Page 2 Spílya Táimu, Warm Springs, Oregon October 5, 2022 Museum seeks tribal artwork for Member Show The Museum at War m Springs will host the Twenty- Ninth Annual Tribal Mem- ber Adult and Youth Art Ex- hibit November 15. The show will be on display through early February 2023. Artists can submit work up to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Octo- ber 15. The application for ms—for Adult and Youth—include the guide- lines and contract. You can get a copy of the form at the museum, or see kwso.org For the exhibit the mu- seum welcomes Contempo- rary, Traditional and Video art. Items will be displayed in the museum Changing Exhibits Gallery. For adults, the museum recognizes the individual tal- ents of each artist. These works will be considered by a neutral judge. The Judges Choice categories include the Contemporary, Tradi- tional and Video, including shot films and music videos. There will also be Honorable Mention awards. “We’re anxiously awaiting your submissions, and are looking forward to your par- ticipation in making this ex- hibit a great success,” said Angela Smith, museum Cu- rator and Exhibits coordina- tor. For the youth, ages 17 years and younger, their art- work will not be judged. “I ask that you encourage the young artists of your fam- ily to participate in the ex- hibit,” Ms. Smith said. “It would be fun to see artwork by the different family mem- bers.” There will be a soft open- ing on October 15, when all the artwork be on display. Due to continued health and safety concerns, there will not be an open recep- tion, “though please con- tinue to encourage your friends and family to enjoy the show,” Angela said. If you have questions, contact Ms. Smith at 541- 553-3331, extension 412. Phone service has not been reliable, so you might try emailing her at: angela@museumatwarm springs.com Or stop by the museum and speak with her. The Museum at Warm Springs is open Tuesday through Saturday 9a.m. to 5 p.m., closed for lunch from noon to 1 p.m. The museum is closed Sunday and Mon- day. The museum will present the exhibit Faces of the Land through this month. Reservation wildfire protection at U.S. Senate The U.S. Senate Commit- tee on Energy and Natural Resources is looking at legis- lation that would help protect the Warm Springs reserva- tion from wildfire, and em- power the tribes to restore cultural and forest resources on Mt. Hood. The legislation is co-spon- sored by Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley. “This legislation is about honoring tribal treaty rights, and making sure the deep knowledge of tribes is inte- gral to any forest manage- ment plans on the moun- tain,” Sen. Wyden said. Sen. Merkley com- mented, “The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs are the largest neighbor to the Mt. Hood National Forest, and have a unique interest in maintaining and protect- ing its cultural and ecologi- cal resources. “This legislation is an im- portant step in fulfilling our treaty and trust responsibili- ties to the Warm Springs community by creating a framework for them to take an active role in co-manag- ing the forest and utilizing their knowledge and exper- tise to improve forest man- agement.” The bill is called the Wy’east Tribal Resources Restoration Act. If enacted, the law would direct the U.S. De- partment of Agriculture and the Forest Service to enter into a memorandum of understanding with the Confederated Tribes, and develop a management strateg y on parts of the Mt. Hood National Forest that incorporates the tribe’s traditional knowledge of the area and reduces wild- fire risk. Chemical cleanup work to begin on Columbia fishing site A popular fishing site on the Columbia River for tribal members was listed last week as a Superfund site by the federal government. Toxins near the Bonneville Dam, at a place called Bradford Island, prompted the U.S. Environ- mental Protection Agency to put the area on the National Priority List in March. The area near Bradford Island is described as “a toxic soup for resident Courtesy Bradford Island Superfund site to be cleaned up. fish, with chemicals like PCBs among the most haz- ardous.” The chemicals damage the river, the fish and other aquatic life, and can cause cancer in people. Testing has found the chemicals espe- cially harmful to small chil- dren, fetuses and immune and thyroid-compromised persons. Fishing continues at the site, making cleanup an im- mediately pressing issue. Sacrificing sacred sites in the name of climate change By Jeremy Takala, Yakama Nation; and Lauren Goldberg , Columbia Riverkeeper Why should low-carbon projects be permitted to de- stroy legendary Native American sacred sites? Our elders witnessed the construc- tion of The Dalles Dam that flooded and silenced Celilo Falls on the Columbia River. The Goldendale pumped- storage hydroelectric project is proposed to benefit the state of Washington’s clean- energy portfolio. The project site is situated on Pushpum—a sacred site to the Yakama Nation, a place where there is an abun- dance of traditional foods and medicines. The developer’s footprint proposes excavation and trenching over identified In- digenous Traditional Cultural Properties, historic and ar- chaeological resources and access to exercise ceremonial practices and treaty-gather- ing rights. Notably, the project site covers the ancestral village site of the Willa-witz-pum Band and the Yakama fish- ing site called As’num, where Yakama tribal fishermen con- tinue to practice their treaty- fishing rights. Yakama Nation opposes the development. The devel- Courtesy Proposed site of the Goldendale pumped-storage hydroelectric project, an area sacred to the Yakama. oper proposes two, approxi- mately 60-acre reservoirs and associated energy infra- structure within the Colum- bia Hills near the John Day Dam and an existing wind turbine complex. The majority of the nearly 700 acre site is undeveloped; the lower reservoir would be located on a portion of the former Columbia Gorge Alu- minum smelter site. The tribe’s treaty-reserved right to exercise gathering, fish- ing, ceremony and passing of traditions in the area of the proposed project has existed since time immemorial. The tribe studied mitigation; it is impossible at this site. Columbia Riverkeeper, and more than a dozen other nonprofits, stand in solidar- ity with Yakama Nation and oppose the development: The climate crisis does not absolve our moral and ethi- cal responsibilities. Tribal nations and environmental groups have worked tirelessly to stop fossil fuel develop- ments and secure monumen- tal climate legislation in the Pacific Northwest. But we refuse to support a sacrifice zone to continue to destroy Native American cultural and sacred sites. CRITFC grant for support services The Columbia River In- ter-Tribal Fish Commission received a Violence Against Women grant to continue providing victim and inter- vention services within the area served by CRITFC. “Native people who live and fish along the Columbia River face many social chal- lenges, a situation that unfor- tunately is common through- out Indian Country,” said Aja DeCoteau, executive direc- tor of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commis- sion. “This funding will allow us to continue providing vic- tims of sexual violence with essential supportive services and culturally-informed pre- vention programs that help support stronger, healthier, and safer communities.” Oregon’s U.S. Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley last week an- nounced the grant to CRITFC, as well as Violence Against Women funding to the Klamath and Siletz tribes. In all the grants to tribes and tribal organizations in the state is $1.6 million.